Well, I knew this day
would come. I knew that as soon as I started covering hip-hop, and especially
after I really quite liked the most recent release from Ratking, I'd have to
dive into the noisy, eclectic, and inaccessible subgenre of noise hop. A very new
genre, one inspired by the experimental fusion between noise rock and hardcore
gangsta rap, it was one I was always tentative to approach. Because let's face
it, while I do listen to some experimental and abrasive music, I do like some
trappings of conventionality or at least recognizable song structures and
melodies. And while I loved Swans' most recent record, I also know that I only
really came to embrace the band in full when they started incorporating more
melodic progressions into their music. And given that I wasn't really a huge
fan of what I had heard from the output of acts like Death Grips, I was a
little uneasy about looking up an act like Clipping, so I looked up their first
album Midcity and...
Well, if I was looking for
the perfect transitional act between traditional horrorcore gangsta rap and the
paranoid noisy insanity of Death Grips, it would be Clipping - and yeah, I
really dig it. The bizarre thing about Clipping is that once you get past the
explosively jagged noise, there is undercurrents of melody and depth to these
mixes and Daveed Diggs is a damn impressive spitter, although not the
traditional sort of visceral MC that comes with this sort of experimental
music. My issues with the act were issues of content and the MC himself - while
I definitely like Diggs' flow and lyrical construction, and appreciated the
moments where he seemed to be showing the unstable anarchy and bloody emptiness lurking beneath the
trapping of gangsta rap, there were moments that his flow got a little less
intense and his punchlines got a little corny. For the most part, however, it was
noise rap that I surprisingly liked, and when I heard they had signed to Sub Pop Records, I was curious to see what would come out of it. Would they attempt even more mainstream accessibility - well, to the extent any noise rap is accessible - or would they double down on the weirdness?